Brown fails to show for environmental award under pressure from protest
By Dan Bacher | October 20, 2013 | Over 60 people, including indigenous leaders, environmentalists and labor activists, gathered ...
https://www.elkgrovenews.net/2013/10/brown-fails-to-show-for-environmental.html
By Dan Bacher | October 20, 2013 |
Over
60 people, including indigenous leaders, environmentalists and labor
activists, gathered at the Le Parc Hotel in San Francisco on Thursday,
October 17 from 5:30 to 7 pm to protest the Blue Green Alliance’s
honoring of Governor Jerry Brown with its “Right Stuff” Award.
Faced
with the protest condemning his anti-environmental policies, Brown
apparently decided to back out from receiving the award. In particular,
the protest focused on Brown’s support for fracking, a massive twin
tunnels project and his emissions trading scheme.
A video of the protest is available at: http://www.facebook.com/damien.luzzo/posts/10151866169470318#!/photo.php?v=10201481121482680&set=o.692888177406489&type=2&theater
The
protest was organized by a group of individuals unaffiliated with
national environmental organizations who were galvanized by Brown’s most
recent assault on the environment: the green lighting of fracking in
California.
“Jerry
Brown ignored the majority of Californians and the rank and file of the
Democratic Party who support a moratorium on fracking,” said organizer
Damien Luzzo. “He signaled that he would not sign any of the moratorium
bills and only signed the already weak SB4, after he gutted it at the
11th hour at the behest of Big Oil.”
According
to organizer Lauren Steiner, “When I worked on Jerry Brown’s
presidential campaign in 1992, he was an uncompromised environmentalist.
Now he will support any industry, including polluting ones, if he
thinks it can bring jobs and tax revenues. In 1992, the old Jerry Brown
limited his campaign contributions to under $100, so he wouldn’t be
beholden to special interests. The new Jerry Brown has accepted $2.5
million over the past few years from the oil and gas industry.”
At
the rally, Steve Ongerth, founder of the IWW Environmental Caucus,
talked about some Earth First!ers founded what became the BGA in 1998
and how far the group has strayed from its original. His speech/article
is available at: http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/10/17/jerry-brown-the-wrong-stuff/
“The
Blue Green Alliance, while well meaning, has made far too many
compromises to corporations,” said Ongerth. “I support renewable energy,
but it must be produced sustainably and deployed in harmony with the
environment. Workers who manufacture, install and maintain the equipment
must work under good and safe working conditions. Giving Jerry Brown an
award is proof the Blue Green Alliance has lost its way.”
“It
is ludicrous for Blue Green Alliance to give the Governor an award.
Attacks on the environment or workers will not save our planet,” said
Ongerth.
Michael
Preston, from the Winnemem Wintu Tribe, spoke out against the Bay Delta
Conservation Plan to build the peripheral tunnels and Shasta dam raise
that will cause massive fish extinction and destroy the Delta in order
to divert water to corporate agribusiness, oil companies and Southern
California water agencies.
“I
am here as a Winnemem Wintu Tribe warrior to speak for the salmon and
for our cultural beliefs and sacred sites,” said Preston. "We have to
speak out against the peripheral tunnel and Shasta dam raises because
they could make the fish extinct and destroy the whole Bay Delta
Estuary. These plans will affect all of life more than we know.”
Tom
Goldtooth, Executive Director of the Indigenous Environmental Network,
urged Brown to reject REDD+ carbon trading credits, which allow
corporations to grab huge swaths of land in developing countries in
order to keep polluting at home, usually in low income neighborhoods
populated by people of color.
“Governor
Brown is moving ahead with a policy that grabs land, clear-cuts
forests, destroys biodiversity, abuses Mother Earth, pimps Father Sky
and threatens the cultural survival of Indigenous Peoples,” said
Goldtooth. “The policy privatizes the air we breath. Commodifies the
clouds. Buys and sells the atmosphere. Corrupts the sacred.”
Pamela
Zuppo, from the San Francisco chapter of 350.org, spoke on Brown’s
support of fracking, including his signing of Senate Bill 4, the green
light to fracking bill.
At
the end of the program, Penny Opal Plant of Gathering Tribes read a
list of groups and individuals who should have received an environmental
award this year instead of Jerry Brown.
These include:
•
Holly Mitchell, who introduced a strong fracking moratorium bill in the
state legislature and LA City Council members Paul Koretz and Mike
Bonin, who recently introduced a fracking moratorium motion in Los
Angeles;
• Mark Jacobson, from Stanford University, who has developed a plan to power California with 100% renewables by 2030;
• The Center for Biological Diversity and Earthjustice, whose lawsuit halted fracking in public lands in California;
• Truthout, the on-line publication whose investigative reporting uncovered fracking off the California coast;
• The Coalition to Decommission San Onofre, whose tireless work led to the shutdown of this dangerous nuclear power plant;
•
State Senator Lois Wolk, a tireless opponent of the Bay Delta
Conservation Plan, whose recently signed bill SB43 allows customers to
get more than 20% of their power from renewables;
•
The Klamath Justice Coalition, a coalition of members of Indian Tribes
and activists who have helped stop fish kills and fought for dam removal
on the Klamath River;
•
The California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, which has filed
hundreds of successful lawsuits and complaints compelling industry,
agribusiness, cities, counties and water boards to comply with the Clean
Water Act; and
•
Richmond Mayor Gayle McLaughlin, who has waived residential solar
permit fees, initiated a solar thermal rebate policy and a green jobs
training program, sponsored Green Building and Compostable Food Ware
ordinances and helped negotiate a $114 million settlement with Chevron.
One
highlight of the protest was a group of flash-mobbers who sang and
danced to Toxic. Anti-war mom Cindy Sheehan, who is running for Governor
on the Peace and Freedom Party ticket, also showed up at the protest
with a group of her supporters.
As attendees of the dinner were arriving, protesters also handed out an alternative program for the event featuring the 10 worst environmental policies of Governor Brown. These include: the twin tunnel plan; plans to weaken the California Environmental Water Quality Act (CEQA); record water exports out of the Delta; record Delta fish kills; the signing of Senate Bill 4; clear cutting in the Sierra Nevada; pro-oil industry appointments to the Department of Conservation; the support of "theme park" wetlands; the failure to abide by the fish doubling provisions of the Central Valley Project Improvement Act (CVPIA) and support of REDD.
The
program also included the list of groups and individuals who should
have received an environmental award this year instead of Jerry Brown.
For more information about Jerry Brown’s abysmal environmental record, go to: http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/06/12/jerry-brown-worse-than-schwarzenegger-on-environment/
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